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Macro trial of pen on textbook

Comparing the size of a few favorite textbooks to the size of my iPad.

textbooks for distribution

"Aldine Readers Primer," revised edition, 1916. Illustrated by Margaret Ely Webb. Authors Catherine Bryce and Frank Spaulding. Newson and Co., 1907, 1915, 1916.

From my criminal justice textbook:

 

"... lawyers have fallen asleep during their clients' death penalty trials, yet one Texas judge found no problem with such behavior. He wrote that everyone has a constitutional right to have a lawyer, but 'the Constitution does not say that the lawyer has to be awake.'"

Textbook example of "WRONG leader" here. I sure hope CP carries through with their talk about improving the loco fleet image, but I wonder if anyone realizes that may also mean actually washing something. Hard to believe both of these toasters wear the same red.

 

By the way, it's late in the day and this is still photographed under clear skies. But it's a "smoke shag" as the sun has sunk low enough to be stuck in the smoke haze from the Montana forest fires.

  

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My friend N. made a cover for a friend's daughter's history textbook.

It looks like a Defense against the Dark Arts textbook with silver

trim (air conditioner tape), white cloth, and a gem-filled cufflink

for a closure frog. Kinda cool. Photo is mine, design is his.

It's mocking me, I can tell. At any moment it's about to fling itself open and bombard me with a flood of terms to learn like "sporophyte" or "gymnosperm" or worse.

Classes start in a week and a half. Where did summer go? (And why is it hotter than ever?) Having all my books is hard evidence that I will soon be back to school. Wow.

Bi-Partisan Cafe, Portland. I asked his permission; he seems to be reading a textbook. Thank you for participating in my project. Other photos of readers are here: www.flickr.com/photos/greg_myers/albums/72157652125931010.

Oh those clever nine year olds.

Randy Ragan, president of the SIU Alumni Association, speaks to recipients of the SIU Alumni Association Textbook Award Tuesday in the Old Main Lounge of the Student Center. The scholarship is designed to award students with textbooks based off of their academic needs. In order to receive the award, students must possess a 3.0 grade point average and demonstrate financial need. – Pat Sutphin | Daily Egyptian

Dialogue: Coming to a School Near You! BRRR! Our Chilly Planet. Numbers Lie (Just Like Liberals). How White Christian Dudes Saved the Day for Capitalism. Glenn Beck: Collected Poems.

Textbooks are assigned to students through the library, and sometimes we get nasty surprises when they’re returned, such as this damage from a frozen drink. Unfortunately for the student, the cost is high for replacing textbooks that come back looking like this. (This book was $116 in Canadian Dollars.)

Lori started taking pictures of me while I was deeply immersed in the Register.com v. Verio case. I promise my eyes are open behind the book.

Luke swiped this book from Mrs. Campbell in 1983...and he calls his sister a packrat?

Textbooks are assigned to students through the library, and sometimes we get unfortunate surprises when they’re returned, such as this black mould.

These were me and Prentyce's college textbooks in our apartment. There were more... most of these are his.

“Kansas Primer” by Anna W. Arnett and illustrated by Ruth Mary Hallock. Copyrighted in 1914 by both Anna W. Arnett and the State of Kansas. B.P. Walker, State Printer, Topeka, 1922.

This university professor wrote his own textbook. Interviewed him in Korea.

Damaged junior high school textbook returned by student in June 2015.

 

Note the lovely green and black mould growing where the textbook displays evidence of a Starbucks Frappuccino stain.

 

Cost billed to the student for replacement? $72 Canadian dollars.

British Columbia's open textbooks project already has helped almost 300 post-secondary students, who saved an average of $146 each on their textbook costs for the fall 2013 semester.

 

Learn more: www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2014/01/students-saving-money-with...

  

Visit my blog to see what textbooks have to do with the professional world

 

Thatsrealprofessional.blogspot.com

André Derain was not the first French artist to depict the scene along the north Thames Embankment, looking towards Westminster. Claude Monet visited the scene several times between the 1870s and around 1902, interpreting it with an Impressionist’s eye. André Derain represented the Fauvist school of Post-Impressionism, with the signature bold colours that of the artists whose collective name meant “wild animals”. This view from 1908 remains recognisable today.

Left to Right: 3025, 3077, 3055, 3055, 3040, 3040, 3041 ~= $600

This is something I found recently at the university bookshop. Manga textbooks!

 

マンガでわかる (manga de wakaru) loosely translates to "You'll understand with Manga".

 

These textbooks are about pretty advanced subjects. There's 電子回路 (でんしかいろ) electronic circuitry, 量子力学 (りょうしりきがく) quantum mechanics and 熱力学 (ねつりきがく) thermodynamics!

 

Continued in a blog post at http://www.kenleewrites.com/2010/03/manga-textbooks.html.

The Bible is THE textbook in the class, says Executive Director Terri Butcher. Students are encouraged to bring their own, but NIV Study Bibles are made available through donations to the center.

Damaged junior high school textbook returned by student in June 2015.

 

Note the lovely green and black mould growing where the textbook displays evidence of a Starbucks Frappuccino stain.

 

Cost billed to the student for replacement? $72 Canadian dollars.

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